Stress causes so many health issues. From heart to high blood pressure and ulcers, stress can become a major cause of illness and bad health. Bad ways of coping with stress can also cause health issues. Many individuals look to cope with stress via binge eating. Over eating and eating unhealthy as a way to cope with stress can cause multiple issues for those on restricted diets or those trying to stay in shape. There are far more productive ways to cope with stress but unfortunately many turn to food when depressed or upset.
Proper coping with stress determines if one handles it properly. Stress eating only makes matters worst
The article, “Stress eating — there are ways to cope, and change the way you think about food” by Sandra Guy looks at this unhealthy coping method. She states,
“ny rationale for coping with and overcoming unhealthy eating habits — especially over-eating high-fat, high-sugar and highly processed food as a stress reliever — requires a full-scale change of mindset, desire and behaviors, experts say. “Stress eating is poor stress management,” says Sylvia Herbozo, Ph.D., an associate professor of psychiatry and surgery and director of the Body Image and Eating Behaviors Lab at the University of Illinois-Chicago’s College of Medicine.”
Please also review our Stress Management Consulting Program and see if it meets your academic and professional goals. As a Stress Management Consultant you can help individuals cope with stress in a variety of healthy ways.
Around one in five Americans are living paycheck to paycheck, and around 85% of them report feeling stressed about money at least sometimes, according to a survey by Propeller Insights. For 52% of healthcare workers belonging to Generation Y (i.e. those born in the 1980s and 1990s), personal finances are actually the top source of stress. Research by Emerging RN Leader suggests that around 20% of nurses have more than one employer, and many work full-time in two different clinics or hospitals. Much of the problem is driven by student loans. The median loan amount racked up by graduate nurses hovers between $40,000 and $54,999. This is a big burden to start one’s career with, and indeed, one that can be hard to eliminate in just a few years. How can employers reduce the burden on these and other workers, so they can have the future they deserve after so many years of service?
Financial Stress Is Not Exclusive To Nurses
Employers should offer financial advice to all workers on staff – including doctors, despite their significantly higher salaries. For one, physicians can feel stressed by the fact that their pay is often linked to productivity metrics. Others can enjoy relative stability, yet lack the financial literacy they need to protect themselves against financial fraud or to ensure they have enough saved for retirement. Financial literacy training can help all medical professionals ensure they have enough to live on when they are older. It can serve as a guide so that they are better able to spot scams aimed at older workers and dubious investment opportunities that can destroy years of savings.
Older people may not be aware of the steps they should take to stop the unauthorized use of credit cards. They may also need help with understanding issues like bank and card fees. Financial elder abuse does happen, far more frequently than is discussed on the media. Research indicates that increasing age makes people more vulnerable to financial scams. Health workers therefore need to ensure that their finances and investments are being overseen by trusted professionals. New investment opportunities should be sifted through with a fine-toothed comb and run by trusted financial advisers.
Financial Basics
Employers should provide nurses and doctors with financial courses covering basics such as budget creation, minimum savings percentages, and saving for retirement from day one. A study by EBTS found that not even 50% of healthcare employees budget their finances or have a savings plan in place. Employees should be provided with technology that make financial tasks easier. Apps like Mint and You Need a Budget can easily be linked to their credit cards so that they can easily identify where their money is going at the end of the month.
Using these apps helps them clearly see how everything from that daily cup of gourmet coffee to dining out twice a week or more can hamper their ability to make decent savings from week to week. Literacy sessions should also cover topics such as loans and credit, how to pay debts off quickly and efficiently, and how to improve credit reports. Finally, staff should be introduced to different ways to start saving for their retirement today. This can include pension plans, offered by some private employers.
Battling financial stress begins by taking a proactive strategy to debt and spending. The first step for healthcare professionals is to analyze their own spending patterns so as to work out how to find the amounts they need to build a healthy savings nest. Employers should also provide financial training, so that employers can avoid stepping into financial pits – including credit debt, high-interest mortgages, and potentially problematic pension plans.
Please also review AIHCP’s Stress Management Consulting Program and see if it matches your academic and professional goals. The program in online and independent study and open to qualified professionals.
Anxiety disorders make up the largest amount of mental illness cases in the U.S., affecting 18.1 percent of the population each year, according to the Anxiety and Depression Association of America. Anxiety disorders can develop from various risk factors including genetics, personality, brain chemistry, life events, and the environment you live in. When left untreated, anxiety disorders can lead to other mental health problems, like depression, or even physical health problems, like high blood pressure. Thankfully, anxiety disorders are highly treatable and can be avoided by making some lifestyle changes. One thing that is changing how people deal with anxiety disorders is smart home technology. Thanks to new innovations, there are ways that smart home technologies can help people reduce their anxiety.
They take the stress out of home management
A potential source of anxiety and stress for homeowners is having to worry about whether or not some important home appliances or components are working properly. With smart home technologies, you don’t need to worry much about that. Most smart home technologies work independently and are built to work efficiently with as little maintenance as possible. For example, with a properly wired smart thermostat, you can relax knowing that your internal home temperature is always at your preferred level. You can use it to monitor or change the temperature in your home even when thousands of miles away.
You can use some smart home technologies to relax
An anxiety attack can happen at any time when you are at home. If you suffer from an anxiety attack, you may require immediate guidance in dealing with it, which is where a smart speaker comes in. There are skills designed for smart speakers that can help you tackle some of your anxiety problems. For example, Mindscape is a free therapy skill for Google Home and Amazon Alexa that can help you relax by taking you through breathing exercises and asking you about the issues causing your mental distress. Through the smart speakers, the skill can offer you targeted advice on how to overcome what’s bothering you so that you can reduce your anxiety.
They boost safety and security at home
Feeling perfectly secure at home is vital for people with anxiety disorders. You can use various smart home devices to boost security and safety at home. For example, smart cameras paired with smart sensors can keep an eye on your home at all times and alert you and the authorities immediately when there is an intruder. Similarly, smart fire alarms continually monitor your home and alert you when there is a fire so that you can spring into action and save yourself from property loss or injuries. Smart carbon monoxide detectors also give you peace of mind knowing that there are no traces of the dangerous gas in your home.
Anxiety disorders can make it hard to relax even in your own home. Luckily, you can invest in various smart home technologies that can drastically reduce your anxieties so that you can live a stress-free life at home.
Please also review AIHCP’s Stress Management Consulting Program and see if it matches your academic and professional goals. The program in online and independent study and open to qualified professionals.
Stress is a universal thing for all living creatures. Stress can be deadly but it can also be merely a daily thing that we all face successfully without losing our minds.
Americans face different types of stress than others. In developing countries, stress to merely survive is a reality. Americans should consider this when dealing with stress and classify what is most important versus merely a frustration. This does not mean any form of stress is not truly affecting Americans, but it does show that some stress should be dismissed as not as important.
What are the biggest stresses American face? Please also review our Stress Management Consulting Program and see if it meets your goals
Many Americans do face real and important issues though.
Stress can be due to silly things or serious things. We need as Americans to remove or reduce the silly things and learn how to cope with the more serious issues we face. Please also review our Stress Management Consulting Program and see if it meets your academic and professional goals.
Depression affects up to 20% and anxiety 10% of people with cancer, compared to 5% and 7%, respectively, of the general population – as per a 2018 study (by Alexandra Pittman), published in the British Medical Journal. Treating these mental conditions is vital, say researchers, because when they are ignored, both quality of life and survival, are reduced. Specific types of cancer (e.g. lung cancer) are thought to release specific chemicals which are tied into depression, while some treatments (such as chemotherapy) are also linked to this mental condition. Because antidepressant medications can interact poorly with some cancer treatments, health professionals are constantly on the lookout for natural ways to combat anxiety and depression, especially in mild-to-moderate cases. Among a small group of therapies (which includes yoga and mindfulness meditation), art creation is also proving powerful, as found in specific studies.
Art Therapy Can Reduce Pain and Anxiety in Cancer Symptoms
A study (by researchers at Northwestern Memorial Hospital) published in the Journal of Pain and Symptom Management found that art therapy could quell a wide array of symptoms related to pain and anxiety in patients with cancer. The study involved 50 patients at Northwestern Memorial, who took part in the study for four months. During this time, said scientists, art therapy distracted patients from their disease, enabling them to focus on a positive activity they felt in control of. At the end of the study period, patients found that eight out of nine symptoms in the ESAS (Edmonton Symptom Assessment Scale) were reduced. These included depression, anxiety, drowsiness, shortness of breath, and poor appetite. The only symptom on the scale that was not alleviated, was that of nausea.
Art Therapy is Easy, Cost-Effective and Powerful
Art can essentially be practiced by people of all ages – not only those with talent. The advent of new digital technologies mean that the average tech user has many devices at hand that can help them create beautiful artworks. Those into pencil drawing, meanwhile, can find numerous tutorials on drawing faces, figures, and even nature forms – all with just a click or two of their tablet or smartphone. Therefore, art creation can extend to beyond the works created in a formal therapeutical setting. Art can become a hobby that fervent creators can get ‘lost in’ as they seize the present moment and use it to express their current thoughts and emotions.
Art Therapies and Cancer Carers
A study undertaken this year by scientists at Drexel University found that in the battle against cancer, art therapy can help those who care for those who are ill. This is true whether or not the carer is a professional – such as a nurse – or a loved one of the person battling the disease. The researchers stated that families and oncology professionals can experience negative effects while caring for someone who is ill – including compassion fatigue, not having enough time to self-care, and (in the case of family) financial concerns. In the study, a total of 34 caregivers enjoyed 45 minutes of art therapy, creating art and discussing its significance afterwards. Before and after each session, participants were given surveys to report positive and negative feelings (including stress and anxiety). After art therapy, they expressed increases in enjoyment and positivity, and a decrease in negative emotions.
Research has shown that art therapy can help cancer patients battle anxiety and depression. Art has also been found to be beneficial to carers, who can face significant stress when a patient or loved one is diagnosed with cancer. Art is increasingly being used to boost the quality of life of cancer patients, and reduce the stress associated with the disease itself and its treatment.
Please also review AIHCP’s Stress Management Consulting Program and see if it matches your academic and professional goals. The program in online and independent study and open to qualified professionals.
Stress affects the human body in multiple ways. It is important to understand the nature of stress and how it affects the body. Understanding and utilizing stress management practices can help one live a more healthy and productive life.
Men need to understand the nature of stress and incorporate proper stress management techniques. Please also review the Stress Management Consulting Program
The article, “Stress Management: The Biological Nature of Stress” by Snow Qu states,
“One of the most prominent effects of stress on the human mind is its influence on cognitive abilities. A study published in Molecular Psychiatry found that those who experience stress are more vulnerable to mood changes and anxiety disorder later in their lives. ”
Stress can cause multiple physical affects on one self, from the mind to the body. It is important to employ good stress management. Please also review AIHCP’s Stress Management Consulting Program
Stress is a natural part of life. Stress occurs daily but its universal impact is a subjective experience. Many people succumb to stress and allow it to affect them while some are able to deal with stress and minimize its effects. Some individuals respond as an extrovert, while others allow stress to eat them within as an introvert. Some respond with rage, while others enter into isolation and depression.
Stress can originate from our daily schedule and the nature of one’s life. If one understands his or her position in life and what comes with it, these natural stresses come less as a surprise. Someone who commutes to New York City everyday, naturally expects the stress of heavy traffic and road rage scenarios. While the stress is real and present, its effect is determined by the individual’s outlook on life and what he or she expects for that day. The stress of this traffic can build over time but someone who has developed stress coping strategies can more effectively deal with the traffic and minimize its impact on daily life.
One can expect certain stresses on a daily and weekly life but how we handle unexpected stress and multiple stressors is key as well
The same is true for an individual who may work in a office. One should expect numerous phone calls interrupting assignments, as well as multiple deadlines and potentially obnoxious co-workers. These stresses while unpleasant are nevertheless expected stresses. An individual who identifies stressors that are indigenous to one’s daily life will more successfully navigate the day and cope with the stresses that may confront them.
Likewise is the nature of one’s vocation in life. Parents experience different stresses that single people never can imagine. Parents are not only concerned with meeting the expectations of what need done in their own personal lives, but also must be concerned with the child’s needs. Whether that stress is a crying baby, ensuring the children arrive at school, or take children to extracurricular activities, parents understand that certain stresses manifest throughout the day. These potential stresses are certainly not foreign ideas that can emerge throughout the day but are sometimes expected or not entirely a surprise if they do occur.
Natural stresses that are part of one’s daily life are balanced to some extent. They are expected. One knows what to expect on Monday through Friday and what particular challenges come with those days. The balancing act of coping with those stresses in a mild way and still managing the day is a very precarious balance though. The degree of the stress or an unexpected stress can totally unravel one’s neatly planned day. One may plan on heavy traffic on their way to the commute, but not be prepared for a fender bender. One may be ready for the challenge to have all the children arrive to school on time, but not be ready to receive a call a from a teacher that your child skipped class or misbehaved. These issues can unravel one already dealing with the everyday notion of stress.
One can identify stressors that are common and have a plan but when unexpected stressors occur, they can induce a panic, rage, or break down. In addition to unplanned stress, multiple stressors can also play a role. One may be fine with a rude honk from behind in traffic, but later, not be so fine with the person who cuts in front, or even later, the person at work who parks in one’s favorite spot. Simply then add a spilled coffee on one’s favorite shirt and a lack of emotional control could emerge. Certain singular stresses may be manageable but for many, multiple stressors, merely build up to a volcanic eruption.
So while individuals deal with natural stressors, they must also learn to deal with unexpected stressors and multiple stressors at once. While one can expect certain stress to exist naturally within one’s day, one must be also able to cope with the unexpected and multiple issues that may appear uninvited on one’s schedule.
Life has order but it always does not keep to order. This may be very difficult for an OCD person to accept but plans change. One needs to have a plan, a set daily, weekly and monthly schedule, but stress, life itself and issues arise that deviate from anyone’s plan. One can estimate what type of stress or difficulty may occur with a given project, day, or week, but to truly cope with stress, one must be ready to deviate from the path planned if necessary.
While life has general guideline, one can never plan completely without a few bumps and stresses in life. How one handles those detours is the key to living a physical and emotional healthy life
This goes beyond basic Anger Management and Stress Management which identifies issues that arise and teach trained responses to them, but goes a step even farther back basic recognition, and teaches expectations of not only the expected but unexpected as well. One must be flexible in response and able to cope with new unexpected stressors in a better and healthy way.
Of course emotion is a key. Emotion can be irrational and it can over react to stressors and various imperfections within one’s personality can emerge. One truly must learn to know oneself, if one wishes to handle stress and anger on a given day. This goes beyond expecting what stress goes with a day. It goes beyond realizing that plans rarely go to plan. It is even more than realizing that somedays are just bad days filled with multiple stresses at once. It entails, one honestly examining one’s personality and identifying emotional responses to past stress and where personality defects exist within oneself.
This examination of self asks questions regarding oneself. It asks if one is patient, if one is kind, if one is mature, if one is reserved as opposed to impatience, rudeness, immaturity and anger. How we cope truly defines oneself. One naturally likes to see the best of oneself. One who rises to the occasion, controls emotion, and has intelligent responses to situations that are managed by reason not emotion, but this is not always the case.
A person who possesses these traits and is able to handle anger and stress is not only trained but also disciplined. It probably did not occur by accident or over night, but was a skill that was painfully worked on everyday. It was a virtue forged in fire, perfected over numerous falls and conscious restraint in stressful and angry situations. Training one’s will and mind to respond a certain way that is not immature, rash, or angry is a difficult task.
So while it does ensue identifying stressors, preparation and expectation of the unexpected, it also revolves around spiritual and mental betterment. It involves a conscious decision to change one’s response and emotional self to life situations. It is a new spiritual outlook on life that accepts stress, not just daily stress, but every type of cross that may fall upon oneself. It is a universal reaction to every situation that surrounds itself with patience, understanding, and kindness.
So Stress Management and Anger Management is more than just a few sessions of recorded response but is also a re-awakening of self to the world and how it works. It is an acceptance of the temporal reality and how one is going to allow that reality to shape oneself. One can go about as a crazed and AN unhealthy maniac reacting to stress in unhealthy and unsocial ways, or one can start to see the world in a less selfish way that puts others first and emphasizes vocation of life and giving back whatever troubles may occur from it.
Stress Management is more than a few key responses but also a change in life outlook. It is a spiritual awakening about the reality of life. Please also review our Stress Management Consulting Program
This giving back can be a spiritual one where everything is given to God, or for non religious, a giving back to society and its betterment. If one is able to turn stress and how one reacts to it into a more positive spin, where one overcomes it and is able to make society better, or for religious and spiritually minded, offering to God, then one can truly start to see that all stress is natural to this world and no plan is concrete. The plan that matters most is God or the universe’s plan and how one properly plays one’s role.
If one submits to the universal plan of life and starts seeing one’s unique role in the bigger picture, one can become more aware of reality and how stressors are merely noises taking one away from the bigger picture. One needs to deal with stressors effectively. In dealing effectively, one will experience a more calm, healthy, and quiet life.
Please also feel free to review AIHCP’s numerous certification programs in Stress Management Consulting, Anger Management Consulting and Spiritual, as well Christian Counseling Certifications. These training programs can help anyone receive the training, and also information, to live and teach others a less stressful and angry way of living life.
Stress and eating can go hand and hand. Many people cope with stress in different ways. Eating can be a very unhealthy way to deal with stress if it is consistent and in large amounts. It can deviate one from regular exercise and lead to bad dietary habits.
Does stress lead you to unhealthy eating habits? Please also review our Stress Management Consulting Program and see if it meets your academic needs
The article, “Stress-eating: Five strategies to slow down” by Kelly Bilodeau states,
“Weight gain has many underlying causes but one of the most common is something we all experience: stress. Whether it’s the, mild temporary kind caused by a traffic jam or major and chronic, triggered by a traumatic life event — stress is no friend to your waistline”
To learn more about stress and eating, please review the article by clicking here
Please also review our Stress Management Consulting Program, as well as our Holistic Nurse program and see if they match your academic and professional goals.
Stress in the corporate world can cause hypertension and possible heart attack. It is important to monitor stress and keep it down while working and managing a company. Stress Management helps keep the anxiety and stress down.
Stress in the corporate world can be a health risk. Please also review our Stress Management Consulting Certification
The article, “Stress and hypertension in corporate world” by the Elets News Network states,
“Stress is a serious growing concern in the corporate world. In this fast moving world, where everything is time bound, employees are usually under a lot of stress to complete tasks. This lack of balance between workplace demands and job control is the root cause of chronic and acute stress. This is also considered one of the frequent factors in the etiology of hypertension in today’s challenging world.”
Stress does not have to control your life. Learn more about controlling stress through better stress management techniques. Please also review our Stress Management Consulting Certification and see if it meets your academic and professional goals.
Stress is not a natural state of the body but a reactionary one. Stress hormones are produced during the fight or flight moment when a person faces intense moments. The moment can be a life threatening one or a moment that requires more attention. The body is designed to handle these situations in short term reactions.
Chronic stress can cause numerous health issues
Stress though over a long period of time can cause health issues. While it is good to produce these hormones in emergency situations, it is counter productive over a long period of time. Due to this, stress is very unhealthy for the body over long periods of time.
Stress can cause headaches, depression, insomnia, weakened immune system, higher blood sugar, higher risk of heart attack, high blood pressure, and for women, missed periods. Chronic stress symptoms include anxiety, depression, irritability, insomnia and depression. (1)
In the central nervous system, stress produces hormones adrenaline and cortisol. These help speed up the heart beat to deal with danger. This is the reason we call it the fight or flight response. While this is good in the short term, it causes long term issues on the heart and blood pressure.
The digestive system during stress also reacts. It increases one’s glucose to boost energy during stress. While this is temporarily good, it can have long term problems, leading to diabetes two.
The respiratory and cardiovascular systems also play a role during stress. Due to cortisol, it allows your heart to beat faster but also for your blood to absorb more oxygen. This is not good for those suffering from asthma. It is also not good for the long term, leading to higher blood pressure and chance of stroke.
The muscular system is also affected during stress. The muscles tighten up during stress. This can lead to headaches and other muscles spasms. In addition to this, the sexual organs are also affected negatively during stress. In men it lowers testosterone and in women it affects menstrual cycles.
The immune system is also negatively effected by stress. Stress overtime weakens the immune system which leads to many becoming sick when over stressed over a long period of time.
Ultimately, stress hormones are essential to our survival, but chronic stress is unhealthy. The temporary adjustments to stress are good but overtime they are destructive to numerous systems of the body. This is why stress management is so pivotal to good health. Stress Management helps individuals cope with stress hence reducing long term health issues. (2)
It is pivotal for good health to identify stress. Somethings in life are worth worrying about short term and need our attention but many things need to be controlled. Stress Management helps an individual identify whats important and how to cope properly. Stress Management also helps one to identify what is not important.
Stress over time can over whelm at home or work
Some critical stress management techniques can help one reduce stress and become more healthy. Of course the first step in stress management is overall mental view of life. How one reacts to anger and anxiety determine how we cope. Issues from work or home can build up if not properly dealt with from a mental standpoint. A healthy mindset is key to good stress management.
Stress Management hence is closely tied to Anger Management. Identifying triggers that are not essentially stress worthy is important. If triggers can be spotted, then an individual can avoid them or minimize them.
In addition to targeting potential triggers, individuals need to also know how to relax. Relaxation is a key element to stress management. Reducing frustration, mental worry and physical symptoms are important steps to long term health. Many individuals utilize meditation, yoga, or other spiritual practices to reduce stress. Massages and other physical therapies also help. Over working can be a negative thing at times, and individuals sometimes need a vacation, or simply a nice long nap. It is critical to be able to let off steam. Some utilize hobbies, or sports or the gym, to do this, but if one does not have the ability to reduce stress, it will overtake one’s life.
After noting triggers and having ways to reduce stress, individuals need to know how to limit stress around them as well. Rules at home or work that generate a certain type of order can help. Disorder is a big contributor to stress. Organization at home and work can play a large role.
While some find more stress at home, others find more stress at work. Working with difficult people, deadlines and heavy work load can all contribute to that. Some things cannot be avoided and need coped with but other things can be minimized. Again through good communication and organization, stress can be reduced anywhere.
Stress appears in anything in life. This is a reality. As living organisms, we are open to stressful situations by the very definition of living itself. One can learn to deal with legitimate stress appropriately or allow it to overtake one’s life. As we saw, chronic stress has way too many negative impacts on the body to be ignored. It is hence very important to face and reduce in one’s life. Stress Management is the key to spotting stress and coping with it. Stress Management also offers a variety of ways to escape stress and reduce anxiety levels.
Since stress is such a big reality in life, stress management is sought after by millions of people. Individually people seek stress management consultants for aid. Large corporations also look for stress management consultants. Employers have discovered that a less stressful work environment is conducive to higher employee productivity.
Stress Management Consulting is in very high demand because of these needs. Many healthcare and behavioral health professionals look to give stress management consulting to individuals and large corporate firms. The American Institute of Health Care Professionals offers a Stress Management Consulting Training Program to qualified professionals seeking certification.
Stress Management Consulting helps teach others how to manage stress and cope with it through healthy strategies
The program is entirely online and independent study. It is working professional friendly in that it allows professionals to work on the online courses leading to certification at their own pace. The program is completely online and the exam for each course is open book. One can utilize an instructor as much or as little as needed. Some of the courses also have approvals for certain professionals seeking CE hours.
The certification in Stress Management Consulting is a four year certification and be renewed.
If you are interested in learning more about the Stress Management Consulting Certification offered by AIHCP, then please review the program and see if it matches your academic and professional goals.